The Citizen (Gauteng)

Sharks coach has learnt from last Griquas stumble

- Ken Borland

The last time the Sharks hosted Griquas at Kings Park was at the end of July when their own indifferen­t finishing saw them lose an extraordin­ary match 37-27.

Coach Sean Everitt (right) has blared out the lessons from that upset all week ahead of their Currie Cup semifinal against the same opposition in Durban today.

Griquas received five yellow cards in that match and the Sharks were almost always playing with extra men.

But they wasted numerous scoring opportunit­ies, rather aimlessly bashing away at close quarters when varying the point of attack would have surely seen the incredibly brave Griquas defence crack open.

Maybe it was because they had just come back from Covid-enforced inactivity and the unrest in KwaZulu-Natal, but all in all, it was probably the Sharks’ poorest performanc­e of the season.

“A lot of lessons were learnt that day, especially how to deal with the opposition getting yellow cards and how to break down defences on the try-line. And we have built some momentum since then, I think we are a better team now and that result has had a lot to do with it.

“Everyone wants to be in a Currie Cup final, so motivation won’t be an issue and there’ll be no questions over energy. Our lineouts and scrums have also improved since we played Griquas the last time,” Everitt said this week.

In order to get the better of Griquas this time, Everitt said his team are going to have to bring a mixture of their ruthless counter-attacking ability and forward grunt that ensures the Sharks can get some fluency with ball-in-hand.

“Griquas have kicked the most in the competitio­n, mostly through Stefan Ungerer, who is an accomplish­ed scrumhalf, and George Whitehead, an experience­d flyhalf. They manage the game well, they strangle and squeeze you and I’m sure they will come here and try and disrupt our style of play. I hope we can match their physicalit­y and the breakdown is a massive area we have worked hard on.

“Our flyhalf (Lionel Cronje) and fullback (Curwin Bosch) need to function well, they complement each other, they’ve produced some really good kicking and they can attack too, especially when we split the flyhalf channel on either side,” Everitt said.

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